Page:Hofstede de Groot catalogue raisonné, Volume 5, 1913.djvu/92

 7 6 GERARD TER BORCH SECT. Sale.Houck of Deventcr, Amsterdam, May 7, 1895, No. 52 (1900 florins, H. Wirtz). In the collection of H. von der Mtthll, Basel. 209. Cornelia Bicker (i629-after 1682), wife of Joachim Irgens. The original is lost. Mentioned by J. Vos, Poems, vol. i. 280. Set Moes, Iconographia Batava, No. 632. 210. Jan de Bisschop (1626-1671), Painter and Engraver at The Hague. The original is lost. A drawing by J. Stolker after the original was sold at The Hague, March i, 1870. See Moes, Iconographia Batava, No. 691, I. 211. Pieter Boom Cornelisz (about 1540-1609), Burgomaster of Amsterdam. This cannot have been painted from life by Ter Borch. Panel, 9 inches by 7 inches. See Moes, Iconographia Batava, No. 855. Sale. Jer. de Bosch, Amsterdam, April 6, 1812, No. 26. 212. Gesina ter Borch (1631-1690), the painter's half-sister, herself a painter at Zwolle. Full length. She stands beside a red-cusliioned chair, on the back of which she lays her right hand. She wears a black dress with laced sleeves and a broad lace collar. Behind her are the chimney- piece and a green curtain. Admirably executed, but not perfectly preserved. Signed on the chair-back with the monogram j canvas, 20 inches by 23 inches. Sale. H. Haendcke and J. Herding, Cologne, October 5, 1896. Janneke ter Borch, wife of Sybrand Schellinger. [See 268.] 213. Maria ter Borch, wife of Justinus Moerkerken and daughter of the ship-broker Harmen ter Borch. The original is lost. A copy, life size, on canvas, painted about 1700, which in the modelling of the hands and the face, in the half-tones of the flesh, and in the costume, arrange- ment, and pose recalls very well the style of Ter Borch's small portraits, is in the De Fremery collection, at 's Gravezande, 1904, and now at Oaklands, California. 214. Moses ter Borch (1645-1667), younger half-brother of Gerard ter Borch. Panel, 14 inches by n inches. Sale. Amsterdam, March 30, 1874, No. 99. VAN BRAECKEL, wife of Colenbergh. [See 219.] 215. The Duke of Buckingham (1627-1687). Three-quarter length. In front of the wall of a loggia, near a drapery, a young cavalier